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Dark Places

Titel: Dark Places Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Gillian Flynn
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picture the mass of pigtails and muffin-bottoms, and then imagined them still running, straight out to the car, and Diane driving away with them and leaving her in this house where she would make everything go silent.
    She pulled herself off the floor, wiped her face with a mildewy washcloth. Her face was always red, her eyes always pink, so it was impossible to tell if she’d been crying, the only advantage to looking like a skinned rat. When she opened the door, her sister was already unpacking three grocery loads of canned foods and sending the girls out to her car for the rest. Patty had come to associate the smell of brown paper bags with Diane, she’d been bringing them food for so long. That was the perfect example of the fall-short life Patty had made: She lived on a farm but never had enough to eat.
    “Got them one of those sticker books, too,” Diane said, flapping it out on the table.
    “Oh, you’re spoiling them, D.”
    “Well, I only got them one, so they’ll have to share. So that’s good, right?” She laughed and started making coffee. “You mind?”
    “Of course not, I should have put some on.” Patty went to the cabinet to find Diane’s mug—she favored a heavy cup the size of her head that had been their father’s. Patty heard the predictable spitty sound, and turned around, pounded the blasted coffee maker once; it always stalled after its third drool of coffee.
    The girls came back in, heaving bags up on the kitchen table, and, with some prompting from Diane, started to unpack them.
    “Where’s Ben?” Diane asked.
    “Mmmm,” Patty said, scooping three teaspoons of sugar into Diane’s mug. She motioned to the kids, who’d already slowed theircupboarding of cans and were peering up at various angles of pretend nonchalance.
    “He’s in trouble,” Michelle exploded, gleefully. “Again.”
    “Tell her about his, you know what,” Debby nudged her sister.
    Diane turned to Patty with a grimace, clearly expecting a tale of genital mishap or mutilation.
    “Girls, Aunt D got you a sticker book …”
    “Go play with it in your room so I can talk to your mother.” Diane always spoke more roughly to the girls than Patty did, it was Diane playing the pretend-gruff persona of Ed Day, who’d rumble and grumble at them with such exaggerated fatigue they knew even as kids that he was mostly teasing. Patty added a beseeching look toward Michelle.
    “Oh boy, a sticker book!” Michelle announced with only slightly overdone enthusiasm. Michelle was always happy to be complicit in any grown-up scheme. And once Michelle was pretending she wanted something, Libby was all gritted teeth and grabby hands. Libby was a Christmas baby, which meant she never got the right amount of presents. Patty would hold one extra gift aside—and Happy Birthday to Libby!—but they all knew the truth, Libby got ripped off. Libby rarely felt less than ripped off.
    She knew these things about her girls, but she was always forgetting. What was wrong with her, that these bits of her children’s personalities were always surprising her?
    “Wanna go to the garage?” Diane asked, patting the cigarettes in her bosom pocket.
    “Oh,” was all Patty answered. Diane had quit and returned to smoking at least twice a year every year since she was thirty. Now she was thirty-seven (and she looked much worse than Patty did, the skin on her face diamonded like a snake), and Patty had long learned the best support was just to shut up and make her sit in the garage. Just like their mom had with their dad. Of course, he was dead of lung cancer not long after his fiftieth.
    Patty followed her sister, making herself breathe, getting ready to tell Diane the farm was gone, waiting to see if she’d scream about Runner’s reckless spending and her allowing Runner’s reckless spending or if she’d just go quiet, just do that single nod.
    “So what’s up with Ben’s you-know-what?” Diane said, settling into her creaky lawn chair, two of the criss-crossed straps broken and hanging toward the floor. She lit a cigarette, immediately waving the smoke away from Patty.
    “Oh, it’s not that, it’s not anything weird. I mean weird, but … he dyed his hair black. What does that mean?”
    She waited for Diane to cackle at her, but Diane sat silent.
    “How’s Ben doing, Patty? In general, how does he seem?”
    “Oh, I don’t know. Moody.”
    “He’s always been moody. Even when he was a baby he was like a cat. All

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